A wagon master and a con-man preacher help freed slaves dogged by cheap-labor agents out West.
Sidney Poitier
Buck
Harry Belafonte
Preacher
Ruby Dee
Ruth
Cameron Mitchell
Deshay
Denny Miller
Floyd
Nita Talbot
Madam Esther
John Kelly
Sheriff
Tony Brubaker
Headman
Bobby Johnson
Man Who is Shot
James McEachin
Kingston
Clarence Muse
Cudjo
Lynn Hamilton
Sarah
Doug Johnson
Sam
Errol John
Joshua
Kenneth Menard
Little Henry
Pamela Jones
Delilah
Drake Walker
Elder
Dennis Hines
Little Toby
Fred Waugh
Mizoo
Bill Shannon
Tom
Phil Adams
Frank
Walter Scott
Earl
John Howard
George
Shirleena Manchur
Esther's Girl
La Markova
Esther's Girl
Hannelore Richter
Esther's Girl
Valerie Heckman
Esther's Girl
Stephanie Lower
Esther's Girl
Enrique Lucero
Indian Chief
Julie Robinson
Sinsie
José Carlos Ruiz
Brave
Ron Fletcher
Logan
Jerry Gatlin
Deputy
Ivan Scott
Express Agent
Bill Cook
Man in Express Office
John Kennedy
Bank Teller
Director
Sidney Poitier
Screenplay, Story
Ernest Kinoy
Story
Drake Walker
February 18, 2017
6
This ain't Louisiana. Now you walk soft in my town.
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Buck and the Preacher is directed by, and stars, Sidney Poitier. It's written by Ernest Kinoy and Drake Walker and joining Poitier in the cast are Harry Belafonte, Ruby Dee and Cameron Miller. Music is by Benny Carter, with notable contributions from Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee, and cinematography is by Alex Phillips Jr.
The Civil War was over and by law the slaves were freed. But when the promise of land and freedom was not honoured, many ex-slaves journeyed out of the land of bondage in search of new frontiers where they could be free at last.
They placed their hopes in the hands of the few wagon masters that knew the territories of the West.
None of this came easy, for not only did they have to overcome a hostile wilderness, but night-riders and bounty hunters were hired by "persons unknown" to hunt them down and turn them back to to the fields.
This picture is dedicated to those men, women and children who lie in graves as unmarked as their place in history.
Quite an opening statement that, a real attention grabber, then the throat grabbing ups still further as we land in a camp of African Americans, freed from slavery, ready to travel West for a better life. This harmony is shattered by the arrival of a night-rider gang led by DeShay (Miller), who promptly murder anyone who moves, not even the swine and poultry are spared. As the camp burns and the distaste in the throat refuses to leave, we feel we are in for something special with Poitier's directing debut, a peek at a part of history rarely shown in the movies.
Sadly the film never hits these heights again....
In some ways it feels like kicking a man when he is down, for Buck and the Preacher is well directed, very well acted, expertly photographed by Phillips (Durango, Mexico and Kenya standing in for Kansas Territory) and features a very untraditional, but pleasing, score by jazz man Carter and blues men Terry & McGhee. But Kinoy (Roots) and Walker have failed Poitier in the writing, badly trying to blend off beat comedy with serious racial thematics, while what little action takes place after that barn storming opening, starts to feel off kilter with the slow pace of the picture.
Such a shame, I mean who better to direct and star in such a thematically potent piece than the graceful Poitier? With Belafonte providing great chemistry as well, whilst gleefully stealing the film from his more illustrious acting brother, there's still much for the Western fan to feast on here. There's the unusual but much appreciated sight of the Indians painted as saviours, a dignified and intelligent race riding in cavalry style, the chief (Enrique Lucero) negotiating with Buck (Poitier) like a royal master of his creed. But this ultimately ends up as not being all that it should be.
I'd urge Western fans to see it, but I can't guarantee you wont be frustrated come the end credits. 6/10
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$0.00
Revenue:
$0.00